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Emeritus Professor David Carter
Emeritus Professor

David Carter

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Overview

Background

Professor David Carter's research interests include Australian literature and publishing history, cultural history, the history of the book, magazines and periodical studies, middlebrow cultures, and studies in modernity.

Professor Carter was Director of the Australian Studies Centre at the University of Queensland from 2001 to 2006, then Professor of Australian Literature and Cultural History in the School of Communication and Arts.

He is the author of Australian Books and Authors in the American Marketplace, 1840s-1940s (2018) with Roger Osborne, Almost Always Modern: Australian Print Cultures and Modernity (2013), Dispossession, Dreams and Diversity: Issues in Australian Studies (2006) and A Career in Writing: Judah Waten and the Cultural Politics of a Literary Career (1997), winner of the Walter McRae Russell Award for literary scholarship. His edited books include the co-edited Fields, Capitals, Habitus: Australian Culture, Inequalities and Social Divisions (2020); Making Books: Contemporary Australian Publishing (2007) with Anne Galligan; The Ideas Market: An Alternative Take on Australia's Intellectual Life (2004); Culture in Australia: Policies, Publics and Programs, with Tony Bennett (2001); and Outside the Book: Contemporary Essays on Literary Periodicals (1991).

He is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities and Series Editor, Anthem Studies in Book History, Publishing and Print Culture, Anthem UK.

Professor Carter has extensive experience in teaching and developing programs in Australian Studies internationally. He was President of the International Australian Studies Association from 1997 to 2001; Manager of the Australian Studies in China program of the Australia-China Council (2002-16); a board member of the Australia-Japan Foundation (1998-2004); and Visiting Professor in Australian Studies at Tokyo University (2007-08 & 2016-17). He is a Board Member of the Foundation for Australian Studies in China.

Availability

Emeritus Professor David Carter is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Fields of research

Qualifications

  • Bachelor (Honours) of Arts, University of Melbourne
  • Postgraduate Diploma, University of Melbourne
  • Masters (Coursework), University of Melbourne
  • Doctor of Philosophy, Deakin University
  • Australian Academy of the Humanities, Australian Academy of the Humanities

Research interests

  • Australian Literature

    Australian publishing history, 20th-century Australian literature, periodicals and book culture, Australian modernity

  • The history of the book

  • Publishing and print culture studies

  • Modernity

  • Immigration and multiculturalism

  • Australian Indigenous Cultures

Works

Search Professor David Carter’s works on UQ eSpace

114 works between 1991 and 2021

81 - 100 of 114 works

2004

Journal Article

Made in England: Australia's British inheritance

Carter, David (2004). Made in England: Australia's British inheritance. Overland, 174, 126-128.

Made in England: Australia's British inheritance

2004

Book Chapter

Introduction: Intellectuals and their publics

Carter, David (2004). Introduction: Intellectuals and their publics. The Ideas Market: An alternative take on Austraia's intellectual life. (pp. 1-11) edited by David Carter. Carlton, Victoria: Melbourne University Press.

Introduction: Intellectuals and their publics

2004

Book Chapter

Asian Australian Studies: China and Japan

Carter, David (2004). Asian Australian Studies: China and Japan. Double Vision: Asian accounts of Australia. (pp. 139-154) edited by Broinowski, Alison. Canberra, ACT: Pandanus Books.

Asian Australian Studies: China and Japan

2003

Book Chapter

The Story of our Epoch, a Hero of our Time: The Communist Novelist in PostWar Australia

Carter, David (2003). The Story of our Epoch, a Hero of our Time: The Communist Novelist in PostWar Australia. Frank Hardy & the Literature of Commitment. (pp. 89-111) edited by Paul Adams and Christopher Lee. Carlton North, Victoria: The Vulgar Press.

The Story of our Epoch, a Hero of our Time: The Communist Novelist in PostWar Australia

2003

Book Chapter

Overviews: Institutions of Australian Literature

Carter, David and Whitlock, Gillian (2003). Overviews: Institutions of Australian Literature. 19th Century Literature Criticism. (pp. 21-32) edited by Zott, L. M.. Farmington Hills, USA: Thomson Gale.

Overviews: Institutions of Australian Literature

2002

Journal Article

Australian beach cultures: The history of sun, sand and surf

Carter, David (2002). Australian beach cultures: The history of sun, sand and surf. Sociology of Sport Journal, 19 (3), 335-337. doi: 10.1123/ssj.19.3.335

Australian beach cultures: The history of sun, sand and surf

2002

Journal Article

Public Intellectuals, Book Culture and Civil Society

Carter, David (2002). Public Intellectuals, Book Culture and Civil Society. Australian Humanities Review (24), 1-14.

Public Intellectuals, Book Culture and Civil Society

2002

Journal Article

Three Journals

Carter, David (2002). Three Journals. Australian Book Review, 1 (237), 73-74.

Three Journals

2002

Journal Article

Communism and Carnival: Ralph de Boissieres Crown Jewel and its Australian Context

Carter, David (2002). Communism and Carnival: Ralph de Boissieres Crown Jewel and its Australian Context. Australian Cultural History, 21, 97-106.

Communism and Carnival: Ralph de Boissieres Crown Jewel and its Australian Context

2002

Journal Article

Bookworld

Carter, David (2002). Bookworld. Australian Book Review, 1 (238), 12-13.

Bookworld

2002

Journal Article

Going, going, gone? Britishness and Englishness in contemporary Australian culture

Carter, David (2002). Going, going, gone? Britishness and Englishness in contemporary Australian culture. Overland, 169, 81-86.

Going, going, gone? Britishness and Englishness in contemporary Australian culture

2001

Book Chapter

Programs of cultural diversity

Carter, David and Bennett, Tony (2001). Programs of cultural diversity. Culture in Australia: policies, publics and programs. (pp. 253-258) edited by Tony Bennett and David Carter. Melbourne, Australia: Cambridge University Press.

Programs of cultural diversity

2001

Book Chapter

Australian culture and its publics

Carter, David and Bennett, Tony (2001). Australian culture and its publics. Culture in Australia: policies, publics and programs. (pp. 135-139) edited by Tony Bennett and David Carter. Melbourne, Australia: Cambridge University Press.

Australian culture and its publics

2001

Journal Article

Magazine History

Carter, David (2001). Magazine History. Media International Australia, 99, 9-14.

Magazine History

2001

Book Chapter

The Public Life of Literature

Carter, David, Bennett, Tony and Ferres, K. (2001). The Public Life of Literature. Culture in Australia: Policies, Publics and Programs. (pp. 140-160) edited by Tony Bennett and David Carter. Melbourne, Australia: Cambridge University Press.

The Public Life of Literature

2001

Book Chapter

Introduction

Carter, David and Bennett, Tony (2001). Introduction. Culture in Australia: Policies, Publics and Programs. (pp. 1-8) edited by Tony Bennett and David Carter. Melbourne, Australia: Cambridge University Press.

Introduction

2001

Journal Article

Jean Devanny: Romantic revolutionary

Carter, David (2001). Jean Devanny: Romantic revolutionary. Australian Historical Studies, 32 (116), 160-161.

Jean Devanny: Romantic revolutionary

2001

Book

Culture in Australia : Policies, publics, and programs

Tony Bennett and David Carter eds. (2001). Culture in Australia : Policies, publics, and programs. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Culture in Australia : Policies, publics, and programs

2001

Journal Article

'Tracking the jack'

Carter, David (2001). 'Tracking the jack'. Meanjin, 60 (2), 203-208.

'Tracking the jack'

2001

Book Chapter

Policy and industry contexts

Carter, David and Bennett, Tony (2001). Policy and industry contexts. Culture in Australia: policies, publics and programs. (pp. 11-17) edited by Tony Bennett and David Carter. Melbourne, Australia: Cambridge University Press.

Policy and industry contexts

Funding

Past funding

  • 2016 - 2019
    Genre worlds: Australian popular fiction in the 21st century
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2014
    AustLit - Infrastucture Supporting Studies in Australian Cultural History
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2016
    Australian Cultural Fields: National and Transnational Dynamics (ARC Discovery Project led by the University of Western Sydney)
    University of Western Sydney
    Open grant
  • 2013 - 2014
    The AustLit Resource: supporting research in studies of Australian literary and narrative cultures
    ARC Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and Facilities
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2013
    Humanities in the digital age: infrastructure for Australian literary studies, publishing studies, and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander studies
    ARC Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and Facilities
    Open grant
  • 2012
    Mapping World War One Digger Narratives: building a searchable, open access research foundation to support centenary related research outcomes on the literary history of World War One (2014) & the Gal
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2012
    Digital humanities practice in Australian literary studies: data development, structural enhancement and open access innovation - Austlit phase 4
    ARC Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and Facilities
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2011
    eResearch Infrastructure for Humanities Scholars: facilitating literary and narratives studies; children's and popular fictions and film/TV studies
    ARC Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and Facilities
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2010
    History of the Book in Australia: Reconceptualising the Regions: Queensland and Western Australia
    UQ FirstLink Scheme
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2010
    AustLit Phase Three: Transforming the study of Australian Literature through a collaborative e-Research environment
    ARC Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and Facilities
    Open grant
  • 2008 - 2009
    AustLit Phase Two: Research infrastructure for humanities and education researchers
    ARC Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and Facilities
    Open grant
  • 2007 - 2008
    AusLit: Phase Two- humanities research infrastructure development, augmentation and expansion
    ARC Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and Facilities
    Open grant
  • 2007 - 2009
    America Publishes Australia: Australian Books and American Publishers, 1890-2005
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2007 - 2009
    Australian literary publishing and its economies, 1965-1995
    University of Western Sydney
    Open grant
  • 2007 - 2009
    The Queensland Historical Atlas: Histories, Cultures, Landscapes
    ARC Linkage Projects
    Open grant
  • 2006 - 2007
    The Queensland Historical Atlas: Histories, Cultures, Landscapes
    UQ FirstLink Scheme
    Open grant
  • 2006
    AustLit- humanities research infrastructure development through knowledge based data set building, augmentation of key research elements and ICT developments
    ARC Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and Facilities
    Open grant
  • 2004 - 2009
    The Cultural Research Network
    ARC Research Networks
    Open grant
  • 2004 - 2007
    Popular Cultures and Social Change: Case Studies from Rural Queensland
    ARC Linkage Projects
    Open grant
  • 2004 - 2006
    The Making of the Australian Middlebrow: Nationalism Modernity and Middlebrow Culture in Australia
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2002 - 2003
    An Analysis of the Patterns of Consumption, Community Impacts and Returns on Investment of Rural Popular Cultural Activities
    UQ FirstLink Scheme
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Emeritus Professor David Carter is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Imagining Australia through Japanese translation: Cultural artefacts and the recreation of Australian literature

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Akiko Uchiyama

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Emeritus Professor David Carter directly for media enquiries about:

  • Australian culture
  • Australian film and TV
  • Australian history
  • Australian literature
  • Australian society
  • Multiculturalism

Need help?

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communications@uq.edu.au